Economic news

India May Inflation Hits 3.93%, Stays below RBI Target

  • India May CPI inflation rises in line with economists' expectations
  • Core inflation at 3.9% - Kotak Institutional Equities
  • May print highest in new inflation series, close to RBI target
  • Fuel price hikes, weak monsoon seen lifting inflation outlook

NEW DELHI, June 12 (Reuters) - India's retail ‌inflation rose to 3.93% in May, driven by higher food and fuel costs, government data showed on Friday, while risks related to the Middle East conflict and a weak monsoon threatened to add further price pressures.

May's reading was marginally below the Reuters projection of 4.0% and remained close ​to the Reserve Bank of India's medium-term target.

It was also the highest reading under the revised inflation ​series introduced in January with a new base year and consumption basket.

The data comes ⁠after state-owned fuel retailers raised fuel prices four times in May alone, pushing up transport inflation to 1.75%, from a decline ​of 0.01% in April.

Food inflation accelerated to 4.78% in May from 4.20% in April and could rise further if ​El Nino conditions weaken rainfall during the June-September monsoon season.

"We estimate inflation at 5.2% for fiscal 2027, with headline likely to cross 6% in third-quarter FY27. Apart from elevated energy prices, El Nino-related disruptions also pose upside risks to the inflation outlook ahead," said Sakshi Gupta, ​principal economist, HDFC Bank.

The monsoon brings about 70% of India's annual rainfall and is critical for agriculture and ​rural incomes, with nearly half of farmland lacking irrigation and millions dependent on farming for their livelihood.

The RBI raised its inflation forecast for the current ‌fiscal ⁠year to 5.1% from 4.6% earlier this month but kept rates on hold as it watches for the effects of a second-round of supply-driven inflation pressures.

So far core inflation, which excludes volatile food and energy costs and reflects more generalised price pressures, has remained in check.

It stood at 3.9% in May, according to estimates by Kotak Institutional Equities.

"The sub-4% headline ​and core inflation points ​towards comfortable trends in the ⁠near term," said Upasna Bhardwaj, chief economist at Kotak Mahindra Bank in Mumbai.

"While softening crude oil prices and the cap on the weakening rupee remain a tailwind, we continue ​to monitor the impact of adverse monsoons on food inflation," Bhardwaj, who expects 50 basis ​points in rate ⁠hikes beginning in October, added.

To combat the impact of rising energy prices and the resulting effect on the rupee, the federal government and the RBI announced a series of measures earlier this month to attract dollar inflows and support the domestic currency.

The Indian rupee ⁠sank ​to a record low of 96.96 on May 20, taking losses since ​the Iran war broke out to nearly 5%. A weaker rupee pushes up prices of imported goods and adds to inflation.

Reporting by Shubham Batra and Shivangi Acharya in New Delhi; Editing by Nivedita Bhattacharjee

Source: Reuters


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